Compass Bank v. Jerry Durant

516 S.W.3d 557, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 70, 2017 WL 56697
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 2017
DocketNO. 02-15-00390-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 516 S.W.3d 557 (Compass Bank v. Jerry Durant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Compass Bank v. Jerry Durant, 516 S.W.3d 557, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 70, 2017 WL 56697 (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinions

OPINION

BONNIE SUDDERTH, JUSTICE

I. Introduction

In four issues, Appellant Compass Bank appeals the trial court’s summary judgment for Appellee Jerry Durant in a dispute over (1) the interpretation of early termination fee provisions contained in certain documents, including an interest rate swap agreement, that were executed by the parties in conjunction with a commercial loan agreement and (2) the award of attorney’s fees to Durant. We reverse and remand.

II. Factual and Procedural Background

In 2008, Durant and Jeff Williams, a loan officer for Compass, entered into negotiations for a loan related to an automobile dealership that Durant was opening in Granbury. In the course of those negotiations, Durant signed both a “swap agreement” and a note.

[560]*560A. Swap Agreements

To assist in understanding the facts of this case and the issues presented on appeal, we provide a brief background on “swaps”—interest rate swaps, in particular, including their purpose and structure.

A financial swap is exactly what the name implies. It is a tool borrowed from age-old bartering practices that has been adapted for use in modern-day commercial transactions. At its fundamental core, it allows two parties, both of whom possess something that they do not want, but each wanting something that the other has, to trade their commodities. The swap allows a party to receive exactly what it wants, but otherwise would not have.

Although bartering, or swapping, has been around for centuries, swaps did not surface into financial markets until the late 1970s.1 They attracted national attention in the wake of the home mortgage crisis of 2008, and served as part of the impetus for the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 which, for regulatory purposes, expanded the definition of a security to include security-based swap agreements, 15 U.S.C.A § 78c (West Supp. 2016), and identified other types of swaps as commodities. 7 U.S.C.A. § la (West Supp. 2016). Today, swaps are defined as a type of “alternative trading system” and are highly regulated, with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) serving as the primary oversight agency providing for non-security-based swap transactions. Id. In discharge of its duty to periodically report trading activity in the swaps market, the CFTC publishes an online Weekly Swaps Report, which reports trillions of dollars in swap activity in the U.S. in any given week. See id. § 2(a)(14).2

A financial swap is used in the marketplace as a type of derivative3 designed to reduce risk. Generally speaking, it manifests itself in a contract between two parties whereby both parties promise to make payments to each other. Lau, supra note 1, at 40. In a basic interest rate swap,4 two parties trade a fixed-rate and variable-interest rate, agreeing to exchange interest rate payments with one another. By entering into a swap agreement, the parties “hedge” the risk associated with the interest rate provided for in another transaction in which they are involved. As the court in Thrifty Oil Company v. Bank of America National Trust & Saving Association explained,

[O]ne [party agrees] to make payments equal to the interest which would accrue on an agreed hypothetical principal [561]*561amount (“notional amount”), during a given period, at a specified fixed interest rate. The other [party] must pay an amount equal to the interest which would accrue on the same notional amount, during the same period, but at a floating interest rate. If the fixed rate paid by the first [party] exceeds the floating rate paid by the second [party], then the first [party] must pay an amount equal to the difference between the two rates multiplied by the notional amount, for the specified interval. Conversely, if the floating rate paid by the second [party] exceeds the fixed rate paid by the first [party], the fixed-rate payor receives payment. The agreed hypothetical or “notional” amount provides the basis for calculating payment obligations, but does not change hands.

322 F.3d 1039, 1042-43 (9th Cir. 2003).

Interest rate swapping is beneficial when one borrower can obtain only a fixed-rate interest payment loan but wants a loan with a variable interest rate, while another borrower can obtain only a variable interest rate loan but wants a fixed-rate interest payment instead. The swap agreement allows the parties to swap interest payments with one another, so that each one receives the advantage—or the disadvantage—of the rate it actually wanted, rather than the one it received from its lender.

For example, assume ABC Company wants to borrow $100,000 on a two-year note, but—not wanting to risk that interest rates would rise during the two-year period, yet willing to forego the benefit of interest rates falling during that same time period—seeks a 10% fixed interest note. The bank, however, will not agree to a fixed interest note, but instead offers ABC a floating interest rate equal to the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR).5 XYZ Company also seeks a $100,000 loan for a two-year term, except that XYZ— who is willing to risk that interest rates will rise for the opportunity to reap the potential benefits of an interest rate decline during the two-year period—seeks a floating interest note. XYZ’s lender, however, offers only a 10% fixed interest rate loan. So, ABC and XYZ enter into an interest rate swap agreement as follows: (1) ABC agrees to pay a 10% fixed interest rate payment on a $100,000 “notional amount”6 to XYZ each year for two years; (2) XYZ agrees to pay the LIBOR rate on the $100,000 notional amount each year for two years to ABC.7

In this example, at the end of the first year, LIBOR is at 9%. The net result— after offsetting the amounts owed by each to the other—is that ABC owes XYZ a payment of $1,000,8 an amount representing the fluctuation in the interest rate that occurred during the payment period (1% of $100,000). At the end of the second year, LIBOR is at 12%. This time, after offsetting the amounts due by both parties un[562]*562der the terms of the swap agreement, XYZ owes a net amount of $2,000 to ABC,9 again, an amount representing the fluctuation in the interest rate that occurred during the payment period (2% of $100,000). See generally Thrifty Oil Co., 322 F.3d at 1043; Butler, supra note 3, at 822.

This transaction is illustrated below:

[[Image here]]

As the illustration shows, by its very design, a swap is a “hedge,”10 or a zero-sum game. What a party loses in the transaction with the lender, it gains in the swap transaction, and vice-versa. The same is true vis-á-vis the parties in the swap deal—one party’s loss will always be equal to the other party’s gain.11

[563]*563As it turns out, in the example above, XYZ ended up paying $1,000 more than it would have if it had simply accepted the terms as offered by its lender.12

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Bluebook (online)
516 S.W.3d 557, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 70, 2017 WL 56697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compass-bank-v-jerry-durant-texapp-2017.